The road trip

Beth O'Leary

Book - 2021

"What if the end of the road is just the beginning? Four years ago, Dylan and Addie fell in love under the Provence sun. Wealthy Oxford student Dylan was staying at his friend Cherry's enormous French villa; wild child Addie was spending her summer as the on-site caretaker. Two years ago, their relationship officially ended. They haven't spoken since. Today, Dylan's and Addie's lives collide again. It's the day before Cherry's wedding, and Addie and Dylan crash cars at the start of the journey there. Dylan's car is wrecked, and the wedding is in rural Scotland--he'll never get there on time by public transport. So, along with Dylan's best friend, Addie's sister, and a random guy on Face...book who needed a ride, they squeeze into Addie's car and set off across Britain. Cramped into the same space, Dylan and Addie are forced to confront the choices they made that tore them apart--and ask themselves whether that final decision was the right one after all"--

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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Published
New York : Jove 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Beth O'Leary (author)
Edition
Jove trade paperback edition
Item Description
"Readers guide included" - cover page 4
Physical Description
384 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780593335024
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A pair of exes travel from England to Scotland for a friend's wedding in O'Leary's delightful third contemporary romance (after The Switch). Sisters Addie and Deb Gilbert are heading north in a Mini that's seen better days when they're rear-ended by Addie's ex, Dylan Abbott, and his obnoxious friend, Marcus, who always did his worst to sabotage their relationship. Marcus's Mercedes is totaled, so the sisters feel obliged to squeeze the guys into the backseat with Rodney, a friend of the bride's who needed a lift. From there, the trip becomes an extended nightmare of hilarious breakdowns, rescues, and pit stops peppered with snide comments, hurt feelings, and rivalries old and new. The present narrative is interspersed with flashbacks to Addie and Dylan's relationship and devastating breakup. Over the course of their misadventures it becomes clear that these two still love each other--but have they matured enough to make it work? As with her surprise hit, The Flatshare, O'Leary expertly balances humor and heart while introducing a zany cast of 20-somethings. Though some readers may balk at the grammar (" 'Sorry,' me and Rodney say simultaneously"), the breezy, conversational tone fits the novel's mood. Readers won't want this crazy road trip to end. Agent: Tanera Simons, Darley Anderson Literary. (June)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Addie and her sister Deb are heading off on a road trip to a friend's wedding when they get into a car accident. The driver of the other car? Addie's ex, Dylan. Addie and Deb take pity on Dylan and his friend Marcus--their car isn't driveable, and there's no public transportation where they're heading--and soon they're all packed into Deb's Mini, along with another guest, Rodney. Interspersed with the present-day narrative of their increasingly complicated journey are recollections from both Addie and Dylan of their initial meeting and how their relationship developed and eventually fell apart. Luckily for them, they suddenly have plenty of time in close quarters to sort through the misunderstandings and bad decisions that led to their breakup and decide whether to give it another shot. Though some readers will find it hard to have much sympathy for privileged Dylan, his character shows a lot of growth between the breakup and the reunion. Addie is a warm and viviacious heroine, and readers will root for her to recover from her emotional wounds. VERDICT This sweet second-chance romance will please fans of The Flatshare and character-driven romances.--Stephanie Klose, Library Journal

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Years after a tumultuous breakup, a young woman finds herself crammed into the same tiny car as her ex for a dayslong drive to a mutual friend's wedding. Addie and her sister, Deb, are excited to be road tripping from their home in England to rural Scotland for their friend Cherry's wedding. They've planned the trip so perfectly that they don't even mind transporting a work friend of Cherry's, an overly apologetic fellow named Rodney. Unfortunately, only a few hours after they set out, they get rear-ended. It turns out the driver is none other than Dylan Abbott, the man Addie has spent two years trying to forget. Worse yet, the car Dylan was driving now needs a tow, leaving him and his best friend, Marcus, without transportation to the very same wedding. Before she can stop herself, Addie invites the men to ride along with her, Deb, and Rodney. Everyone piles into the Mini Cooper, and with each mile they drive, Addie and Dylan find themselves assaulted by memories and unresolved feelings. Meanwhile, the group dynamic, as a whole, is also less than perfect. As the journey progresses, the bickering between the passengers only escalates, creating a slew of awkward moments and surprising revelations. Told alternately from Addie's and Dylan's perspectives, the novel shifts between "Then," when they were falling in love, and "Now," when they are grappling with their unresolved feelings. As a picture of the past begins to crystalize, the author deftly portrays the passion the couple once felt for each other. Unfortunately, other than the sexual chemistry, they seem to be missing a true emotional connection, rendering their potential reunion somewhat less exciting. After the initial flashback scenes, which are quite engaging, Dylan gradually reveals himself to be so self-involved and undirected that his shortcomings weaken the intrigue of his pining over Addie. More fun is watching the other passengers in the car battle against each other as they navigate the uncomfortable ride, squishing into tight spaces and arguing over every possible topic. Despite its unevenness, the story is full of fun: quirky behavior, witty Briticisms, and gleeful slapstick humor. A second-chance romance shows the many potential pitfalls of road tripping. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Dylan "The road of friendship never did run smooth, is what I'm saying," Marcus tells me, fidgeting with his seat belt." This is my first experience of a heartfelt apology from Marcus, and so far it has involved six clichZs, two butchered literary references and no eye contact. The word sorry did feature, but it was preceded by I'm not very good at saying, which somewhat undermined its sincerity. I shift up a gear. "Isn't it the course of true love that never runs smooth? A Midsummer Night's Dream, I believe." We're by the twenty-four-hour Tesco. It's half past four in the morning, the air thick with duvet-darkness, but the bland yellow light from the shop illuminates the three people in the car in front as if they've just moved into a spotlight. We're close behind them, both following the slow, rattling path of a lorry ahead. For a flash of a second I see the driver's face in the rearview mirror. She reminds me of Addie-if you think about someone enough, you start to see them everywhere. Marcus huffs. "I'm talking about my feelings, Dylan. This is agony. Please get your head out of your arse so that you can actually listen." I smile at that. "All right. I'm listening." I drive on, past the bakery. The eyes of the driver in front are lit again in the mirror, her eyebrows slightly raised behind squarish glasses. "I'm just saying, we hit some bumps, I get that, and I didn't handle things well, and that's-that's really unfortunate that that happened." Astonishing, really, the linguistic knots in which he will tie himself to avoid a simple I'm sorry. I stay silent. Marcus coughs and fidgets some more, and I almost take pity and tell him it's all right, he doesn't have to say it if he's not ready, but as we idle past the bookie's another flash of light hits the car in front and Marcus is forgotten. The driver has wound the window down, and she's stretched an arm out, gripping the roof of the car. Her wrist is looped with bracelets, glimmering silver-red in the car lights' glare. The gesture is so achingly familiar-the arm, slender and pale, the assertion of it, and those bracelets, the round, childish beads stacked up her wrist. I'd know them anywhere. My heart jolts like I've missed a step because it is her, it's Addie, her eyes meeting mine in the rearview mirror. And then Marcus screams. Earlier, Marcus gave a similarly horrified scream when we passed a Greggs advertising vegan sausage rolls, so I don't react as fast as I perhaps otherwise would. As the car in front stops sharply, and I fail to hit the brakes on the seventy-thousand-quid Mercedes that belongs to Marcus's father, I have just enough time to regret this. Addie Bang. My head whips up so fast my glasses go flying backward off my ears and over the headrest. Someone screams. Oww, fuck-a pain shoots up my neck, and all I'm thinking is God, what did I do? Did I hit something? "Shit the bed," Deb says beside me. "Are you all right?" I fumble for my glasses. They're not there, obviously. "What the hell just happened?" I manage. My shaking hands go to the steering wheel, then the handbrake, then the rearview mirror. Getting my bearings. I see him in the mirror. A little blurred without my glasses. A little unreal. It's him, though, no question. He's so familiar that for a moment I feel like I'm looking at my own reflection. Suddenly my heart's beating like it's shoving for space. Deb's getting out of the car. Ahead, the bin lorry moves off and its headlights catch the tail of the fox they braked for. It's moving onto the pavement at a saunter. Slowly, the scene pieces itself together: lorry stops for fox, I stop for lorry and behind me Dylan doesn't stop at all. Then-bang. I look back at Dylan in the mirror; he's still looking at me. Everything seems to slow or quieten or fade, like someone's dialed the world down. I haven't seen Dylan for twenty months. He should have changed somehow. Everything else has. But even from here, even in half darkness, I know the exact line of his nose, his long eyelashes, his snakeskin yellow-green eyes. I know those eyes will be as wide and shocked as they were when he left me. "Well," my sister says. "The Mini's done us proud." The Mini. The car. Everything comes rushing back in and I unclick my seat belt. It takes three goes. My hands are shaking. When I next glance at the rearview mirror my eyes focus on the foreground instead of the background and there's Rodney, crouched forward on our backseat with his hands over his head and his nose touching his knees. Shit. I forgot all about Rodney. "Are you all right?" I ask him, just as Deb says, "Addie? Are you OK?" She pokes her head back in the car, then grimaces. "Your neck hurting too?" "Yeah," I say, because as soon as she asks I realize it does, loads. "Gosh," Rodney says, tentatively shifting out of the brace position. "What happened?" Rodney posted on the "Cherry & Krish Are Getting Hitched" Facebook group yesterday evening asking for a lift to the wedding from the Chichester area. Nobody else replied, so Deb and I took pity. All I know about Rodney is that he has a Weetabix On The Go for breakfast, he's always hunching and his T-shirt says, I keep pressing Esc but I'm still here, but I think I've pretty much got the gist. "Some arsehole in a Mercedes went into the back of us," Deb tells him, straightening up to look at the car behind again. "Deb . . ." I say. "Yeah?" "I think that's Dylan. In that car." She scrunches up her nose, ducking down to see me again. "Dylan Abbott?" I swallow. "Yeah." I risk a glance over my shoulder. My neck protests. It's then that I notice the man stepping out of the Mercedes passenger seat. Slim-built and ghostly pale in the dark street, his curly hair just catching the light of the shopfronts behind him. There goes my heart again, beating way too fast. "He's with Marcus," I say. "Marcus?" Deb says, eyes going wide. "Yeah. Oh, God." This is awful. What am I meant to do now? Something about insurance? "Is the car OK?" I ask. I climb out just as Dylan gets out of the Mercedes. He's dressed in a white tee and chino shorts with battered boat shoes on his feet. There's a carabiner on his belt loop, disappearing into his pocket. It was my idea, that, to stop him always losing his keys. He steps forward into the path of the Mercedes' headlights. He looks so handsome it aches in my chest. Seeing him is even harder than I expected it to be. I want to do everything at once: run to him, run away, curl up, cry. And beneath all that I have this totally ridiculous feeling that someone's messed up, like something didn't get filed when it should have up there in the universe, because I was supposed to see Dylan this weekend, for the first time in almost two years, but it should have been at the wedding. "Addie?" he says. "Dylan," I manage. "Did a Mini really just total my dad's Mercedes?" says Marcus. My hand goes self-consciously to my fringe. No makeup, scruffy overalls, no mousse in my hair. I've spent bloody months planning the outfit I was supposed to be wearing when I saw Dylan again, and this was not it. But he doesn't scan me up and down, doesn't even seem to clock my new hair color-he meets my gaze and holds it. I feel like the whole world just stumbled and had to catch its breath. "Fuck me," says Marcus. "A Mini! The indignity of it!" "What the hell?" Deb says. "What were you doing? You just drove into the back of us!" Dylan looks around in bewilderment. I pull myself together. "Is anyone hurt?" I ask, rubbing my aching neck. "Rodney?" "Who?" says Marcus. "I'm OK!" calls Rodney, who's still in the backseat of the car. Deb helps him climb out. I should have done that. My brain feels kind of scrambled. "Shit," says Dylan, finally registering the crumpled bumper of the Mercedes. "Sorry, Marcus." "Oh, mate, honestly, don't worry about it," Marcus says. "Do you know how many times I've totaled one of my dad's cars? He won't even notice." I step forward and check out the back of Deb's battered Mini. It's actually not looking too bad-that bang was so loud I would've assumed something serious had fallen off. Like a wheel. Before I've registered what she's doing, Deb's in the driving seat, starting the engine again. "She's all good!" she says. "What a car. Best money I ever spent." She drives forward a little, up onto the curb, and hits the hazard lights. Dylan's back in the Mercedes, rifling through the glove box. He and Marcus talk about roadside accident assist, Marcus forwards him an e-mail off his phone and I think to myself . . . that's it, Dylan's hair's shorter. That's what it is. I know I should be thinking about this whole car crash thing but all I'm doing is playing a game of spot-the-difference, looking at Dylan and going, What's missing? What's new? His eyes flick to mine again. I go hot. There's something about Dylan's eyes-they kind of catch you up, like cobweb. I force myself to look away. "So . . . you're on your way to Cherry's wedding, I'm guessing?" I say to Marcus. My voice shakes. I can't look at him. I'm suddenly thankful for the dented rear bumper to examine on the Mini. "Well, we were," Marcus drawls, eyeing the Mercedes. Maybe he can't bring himself to look at me either. "But there's no way we're driving this baby four hundred miles now. It needs to get to a garage. Yours should too." Deb makes a dismissive noise, already out of the car again and rubbing a scratch with the sleeve of her ratty old hoody. "Ah, she's fine," she says, opening and closing the boot experimentally. "Dented, that's all." "Marcus, it's going ballistic," Dylan calls. I can see the Mercedes' screen flashing warning lights even from here. The hazards are too bright. I turn my face away. Isn't it typical that when Marcus's car breaks, Dylan's the one sorting it? "The tow will be here in thirty minutes to take it to the garage," Dylan says. "Thirty minutes?" Deb says, disbelieving. "All part of the service," Marcus tells her, pointing to the car. "Mercedes, darling." "It's Deb. Not darling. We've met several times before." "Sure. I remember," Marcus says lightly. Not very convincing. I can feel Dylan's eyes pulling at me as we all try to get the insurance stuff sorted. I'm fumbling around with my phone, Deb's digging in the glove box for paperwork and all the while I'm so aware of Dylan, like he's taking up ten times more space than everyone else. "And how are we getting to the wedding?" Marcus asks once we're done. "We'll just get public transport," Dylan says. "Public transport?" Marcus says, as though someone's just suggested he get to Cherry's wedding by toboggan. Still a bit of a wanker, then, Marcus. No surprises there. Rodney clears his throat. He's leaning against the side of the Mini, eyes fixed on his phone. I feel bad-I keep forgetting him. Right now my brain doesn't have room for Rodney. "If you set off now," he says, "then according to Google you would arrive . . . at thirteen minutes past two." Marcus checks his watch. "All right," says Dylan. "That's fine." "On Tuesday," Rodney finishes. "What?" chorus Dylan and Marcus. Rodney pulls an apologetic face. "It's half past four in the morning on a Sunday on a bank holiday weekend and you're trying to get from Chichester to rural Scotland." Marcus throws his hands in the air. "This country is a shambles." Deb and I look at each other. No, no no no- "Let's go," I say, moving for the Mini. "Will you drive?" "Addie . . ." Deb begins as I climb into the passenger seat. "Where do you think you're going?" calls Marcus. I slam the car door. "Hey!" Marcus says as Deb gets into the driver's seat. "You have to take us to the wedding!" "No," I say to Deb. "Ignore him. Rodney! Get in!" Rodney obliges. Which is kind. I really don't know the man well enough to yell at him. "What the fuck? Addie. Come on. If you don't drive us, we won't get there in time," Marcus says. He's by my window now. He knocks on the glass with the back of his knuckles. I don't roll it down. "Addie, come on! Christ, surely you owe Dylan a favor." Dylan says something to Marcus. I don't catch it. "God, he's an arse," Deb says with a frown. I close my eyes. "Do you think you can do it?" Deb asks me. "Give them a lift?" "No. Not-not both of them." "Then ignore him. Let's just go." Marcus taps on the window again. I clench my teeth, neck still aching, and keep my eyes straight ahead. "Our road trip was meant to be fun," I say. This is Deb's first weekend away from her baby boy, Riley. It's all we've talked about for months. She's planned every stop-off, every snack. "It would still be fun," Deb says. "We don't have room," I try. "I can squeeze up!" Rodney says. I'm really going off Rodney. "It's such a long journey, Deb," I say, pressing my fists to my eyes. "Hours and hours stuck in the same car with Dylan. I've spent almost two years tiptoeing around Chichester trying not to bump into this man for even a second, let alone eight hours." "I'm not saying do it," Deb points out. "I'm saying let's go." Dylan has moved the Mercedes to somewhere safer to wait for the tow. I turn in my seat just as he's getting out of the car again, all lean, scruffy, almost-six-feet of him. I know as soon as our eyes meet that I'm not going to leave him here. He knows it too. I'm sorry, he mouths at me. If I had a pound for every time Dylan Abbott's told me he's sorry, I'd be rich enough to buy that Mercedes. Dylan Sometimes a poem arrives almost whole, as if someone's dropped it at my feet like a dog playing fetch. As I climb into the back of Deb's car and catch the achingly familiar edge of Addie's perfume, two and a half lines come to me in a split second. Unchanged and changed / Eyes trained on mine / And I'm- Excerpted from The Road Trip by Beth O'Leary All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.